Citation Counting, Citation Ranking, and h-Index of Human-Computer Interaction Researchers: A Comparison between Scopus and Web of Science

Main Authors: Meho, Lokman I., Rogers, Yvonne
Format: Preprint PeerReviewed application/pdf
Bahasa: eng
Terbitan: , 2008
Subjects:
Online Access: http://eprints.rclis.org/11238/1/Meho-Rogers.pdf
http://eprints.rclis.org/11238/
ctrlnum 11238
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language eng
format Other:Preprint
Other
PeerReview:PeerReviewed
PeerReview
File:application/pdf
File
author Meho, Lokman I.
Rogers, Yvonne
title Citation Counting, Citation Ranking, and h-Index of Human-Computer Interaction Researchers: A Comparison between Scopus and Web of Science
publishDate 2008
topic BB. Bibliometric methods
url http://eprints.rclis.org/11238/1/Meho-Rogers.pdf
http://eprints.rclis.org/11238/
contents This study examines the differences between Scopus and Web of Science in the citation counting, citation ranking, and h-index of 22 top human-computer interaction (HCI) researchers from EQUATOR--a large British Interdisciplinary Research Collaboration project. Results show that Scopus provides significantly more coverage of HCI literature than Web of Science, primarily due to coverage of relevant ACM and IEEE peer-reviewed conference proceedings. No significant differences exist between the two databases if citations in journals only are compared. Although broader coverage of the literature does not significantly alter the relative citation ranking of individual researchers, Scopus helps distinguish between the researchers in a more nuanced fashion than Web of Science in both citation counting and h-index. Scopus also generates significantly different maps of citation networks of individual scholars than those generated by Web of Science. The study also presents a comparison of h-index scores based on Google Scholar with those based on the union of Scopus and Web of Science. The study concludes that Scopus can be used as a sole data source for citation-based research and evaluation in HCI, especially if citations in conference proceedings are sought and that h scores should be manually calculated instead of relying on system calculations.
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